pydidas (the Python DIffraction Data Analysis Suite) is a toolkit for the analysis of diffraction datasets, both live at beamlines and offline for in-depth analysis.
Pydidas includes a graphical user interface and a command line interface to embed its functionality in other projects or scripts.
Pydidas relies on Qt for the user interface and for internal communication.
Some widgets are extensions of silx widgets.
The (azimuthal/radial) integration uses the pyFAI
engine for fast azimuthal integration. Both pyFAI
and silx
are developed at
the ESRF.
- Please check the citation file CITATION.cff
- Pydidas has also been issued with a global DOI for citations: 10.5281/zenodo.7568610
Pydidas should be installed in a clean environment to allow pydidas to fix the required dependency versions. This environment should be used exclusively for pydidas and no further packages should be installed.
Pydidas requires a Python version >= 3.11.
Environments can be managed using any environment manager (e.g. venv, conda/mamba). Due to dependency management issues, pydidas does not support pre-configured conda/mamba environments any more but relies exclusively on pip for the dependency management.
Pip will install all dependencies together with the pydidas package. There is no need to prepare the environment further.
You will require a pydidas wheel file to install it using pip. If you have not downloaded a build wheel file, you need to prepare one prior to installation.
Wheels for pydidas are available on the pydidas releases webpage. To install a downloaded wheel, activate your chosen environment and use the following command:
python -m pip install <path_to_pydidas_wheel_file.whl>
Download the pydidas source code or clone the git repository and navigate to the folder with the project metadata files (like this README.md). Then, install the package and any missing dependencies:
python -m pip install .
Note that pip might need to build a wheel from pydidas first which will take some time. If you want to build the wheel manually, for example to keep it for later use, simply use the following commands (again, in the pydidas folder)::
python -m build
This will create a tarball and a wheel file in the dist
subdirectory.
Note: You will need to install the build and setuptools packages manually in your chosen environment if you want to build pydidas from source.
If installed as wheel, pydidas offers the following entry points:
pydidas-gui
to start the graphical user interface.pydidas-documentation
to open the pydidas documentation in the default system web browser. Note: The pydidas module must have been run at least once (either through opening the GUI or imported in a python shell) for the documentation to have been created.pydidas-clear-settings
Remove the stored registry keys for pydidas.pydidas-updater
Start a script which automatically updates pydidas to the latest version available on GitHub.pydidas-remove-local-files
This script removes all local log files and stored configuration files.run-pydidas-workflow
Script to run a defined workflow in the console. This script also requires configuration files for the scan and diffraction experiment. Please refer to the full documentation for more details.remove-pydidas
Remove all local config files and registry settings from the system. Please note that this script will not remove the python code itself, but only cleans up the system.
Pydidas includes multiple scripts which are located in the pydidas_scripts
folder.
These can be called directly by python from the command line and they are:
pydidas_gui.py
to start the GUI.pydidas_documentation.py
to open the html documentation in a browser.run_pydidas_workflow.py
to run a processing workflow on the command line.pydidas_updater_script.py
to update pydidas to the latest release published on GitHub.clear_local_settings.py
to remove all registry settings written by pydidas.
Much of pydidas' functionality is also available from the command line or notebooks. Pydidas can be imported and used as any other python module. Please refer to the documentation for more details (see the entrypoint and script for opening the documentation above).
The documentation is included with the distribution, but only in form of the source to keep the distribution small. It will be compiled automatically the first time pydidas is imported in python. This will take some time (about 30 seconds, depending on the system) and a notification will be displayed.
The compiled documentation can be found in the
lib/site-packages/pydidas/sphinx/html
folder and the index.html file is the
global start page.
A pydidas-documentation
entrypoint is available to open the documentation in the
system's default browser.
The graphical user interface also has a menu entry to open the help in a web browser.
The pydidas documentation is also available online through github-pages: https://hereon-gems.github.io/pydidas/
For the full citation information of pydidas, please see the CITATION.cff file.
Pydidas can also be cited by its global DOI on zenodo: 10.5281/zenodo.7568610
The pydidas source code is released under the GNU General Public License Version 3. The documentation is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY-4.0). Images and logos are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY-ND-4.0). Insignificant files (e.g. changelog) are released under the CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication (CC0-1.0).